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Russian Women Sentenced For Twerking Next To WWII Memorial

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MOSCOW (AP) — A court in southern Russia has sentenced three young women to brief jail terms for making a video showing them twerking next to a World War II memorial.

Russia celebrates the 70th anniversary of the Allies' victory in the World War II next month, an emotionally charged holiday the Kremlin has been using for propaganda purposes.

The sentencing in the Novorossiysk district court of a 19-year-old woman to 15 days in jail and two women in their 20s to 10 days comes after prosecutors launched a probe into a video showing a group of women twerking next to the memorial on the Black Sea. Twerking is a sexually provocative dance involving thrusting of the hips.

Prosecutors said in a statement Saturday that five women were found guilty of "hooliganism" and two of them were spared jail because of poor health. Hooliganism is the charge that sent two members of punk band Pussy Riot to prison for two years for an impromptu protest at Moscow's main cathedral in 2012.

Prosecutors in Novorossiysk also said they were pressing charges against the parents of one underage girl who was twerking with the others girls for "the failure to encourage the physical, intellectual, physiological, spiritual and moral development of a child."

This is a second twerking scandal in Russia in less than two weeks.

Investigators last week launched a probe into a dance school in the city of Orenburg after a YouTube video of female school girls dressed as bees and twerking in a sexually suggestive Winnie the Pooh routine sparked outrage. The dance school was temporarily shut down while officials in this southern city not far from the Kazakh border ordered an inspection of all dance schools in the region.

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New Instagram Filters Are Here! So Are Emojis In Hashtags!

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Instagram released three new filter options for iOS and Android on Monday. Even more exciting is that the photo editing and sharing app will now support emojis in hashtags. Huge news.

The changes are happening on Monday, according to Instagram's blog post. You'll just need to update your Instagram app.

Until now, you couldn't even press an emoji key while searching hashtags on Instagram. This change lets you create emoji hashtags and search for them. It's magical. Here's what it looks like:

instagram hashtag emojis


You still can't use emojis in hashtags on Facebook or Twitter. (Get it together, other social media sites! Emojis are the future.)

The new filters are called Lark, Reyes and Juno. Here's what they look like:

instagram hashtag emojis

As time goes on and Instagram's other features allow you to edit your photos more intensely with brightness, contrast, tone, saturation and more, filters seems less and less important. Still, Instagram plans to keep rolling out new ones "more regularly going forward," per the company blog post.

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The Whimsical, Photoshop-Free Newborn Pictures You Have To See To Believe

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Polish parents Ania Waluda and Michal Zawer are photographers and bloggers, and when their daughter Emilia was born, they decided to get extra creative with their newborn photos.

Inspired by imaginative twentieth century photographers like Philippe Halsman and Jean Dieuzaide, Waluda and Zawer created a photo shoot that was both whimsical and Photoshop-free.

"The main idea behind this photo shoot was our daughter's safety," the parents told The Huffington Post, adding, "We didn't want to use any extraordinary props." Instead, they created images by simply laying baby Emilia on a mattress, alongside her father and various small props. Then, Waluda captured the images from above (taking a few short breaks when Emilia fell asleep). The experience was "quality family time" and "really good fun" the parents recalled.

"We wanted to inspire other people to take creative newborn pictures rather than using awkward props and scenography," Zawer and Waluda explained. "Also, we wanted to show that you can create a dramatic impression with a small model feeling comfortable and super safe."



H/T BoredPanda



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10 Artists, Illustrators And Designers Committed To Keeping Print Alive Around The World

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print



"Print isn't dead."

So reads a block of text opposite the table of contents in People of Print. The beautifully adorned tome, published by Thames & Hudson earlier this month, explores a world in which GIFs, generative imagery and fractals have become ubiquitous. Digital and algorithmic art is no longer the future; in fact, it's hardly the present.

Amidst this sea of screen-based masterpieces, though, authors Marcroy Smith and Andy Cooke are spotlighting the designers, illustrators and collectives who are still embracing the traditional corners of print techniques. From the fanzine masters and self-published bookmakers to the poster artists and comic illustrators that live at the center of vintage fandom to textile artisans and handmade fashionistas, People of Print features profiles on 45 individuals or groups devoted to "tactility, materiality, and the visible craft of print."

Smith is the director of the online version of the book, described as a library of illustrators, designers and printers that began back in 2008, as well as the founder and editor of the aptly named magazine, Print Isn't Dead. Cooke is a British graphic designer with a self-professed "questionable beard," whose list of clients includes Google, Ikea and Microsoft. Together they've pulled together images and interviews from artists like Mike Perry, Dolly Demoratti, Erik Kessels and KeeganMeegan & Co.

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"Print offers a different experience altogether," writes KK Outlet curator Danielle Pender, in an introductory essay for the book. "It's sensory, the smell and feel each add something different to the content. Something committed to print holds more weight in the eye of the reader than something online... Rather than our digital lives relegating print to obsolescence, they have cemented it as something more valuable."

In the spirit of Pender's words, we've compiled a list of 10 featured printers you should know. Below are the names of a handful of artists, illustrators and designers committed to keeping print alive:

1. Fatherless

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Fatherless, Untitled, screen print, 2012


Fatherless is a collective of printmakers, designers, graffiti artists and educators rooted in the American Midwest, consisting of Corey Hagberg, Jarrod Hennis, Javier Jimenez, Greg Lang, and Dave Menard. The name "Fatherless" comes from the collective's process of creating -- every "Rust Belt Power Pop" screen print touches the hands of each artist in the group. "They are not five artists that work 'under' the name of Fatherless," its online description reads. "A Fatherless print is made by five artists."

2. Jon Burgerman

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Jon Burgerman, Tricolore (Man, Pizza, Cigarette), screen print, 2012


London-based illustrator Jon Burgerman's murals, toys, prints and apparel showcase the art of doodling at its best. “A doodle isn’t necessarily a drawing on a piece of paper,” he described in an interview with PSFK. “A doodle can be an idea, it can be a melody. It’s just something that you do maybe when you’re meant to be doing something else or when you’re not full concentrated on that one task so you have a slightly absent-minded distraction. You’re traveling or you’re walking around and sketching something, and from the depths of your mind something magical happens.”

3. Killer Acid

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Killer Acid, Live and Let Live, screen print, 2010


Rob Corradetti founded Killer Acid, a print-based art project centered on everything from screen printing to stickers to t-shirts -- generally, the ephemera associated with Brooklyn band art. The works cull inspiration from drug culture, American kitsch and surrealism. Appropriately, Killer Acid has designed for bands like the Black Lips, Mac Demarco and The Pizza Underground.

4. Carnovsky

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Carnovsky, Landscape No. 1, digital, 2013


Based in Milan, Italy, the duo of Silvia Quintanilla and Francesco Rugi make up Carnovsky. Together they produce everything from wall paper to garments to furniture, many of which interact with red-green-blue light systems that change the very appearance of their layered imagery. Quintanilla and Rugi are inspired by antique natural history books and engraving techniques, resulting in a color-drenched oeuvre that blends detailed figuration with a hypnotic palette.

5. Frenchfourch

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Frenchfourch, Bastonnade, screen print, 2013


Based in Paris, France, Frenchfourch aims to highlight "the young, flourishing and talented scene of French, European and world graphic artists." The above image comes from "Bastonnade," a project that spans seven countries, in which Frenchfourch hosted a new screen printed installation and a new collective in each city it visited.

6. Age of Reason

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Age of Reason, Lollipop Queen, digital, 2014


Age of Reason, a Hove, UK-based print label, specializes in natural fiber scarves that blend memories of designer Ali Mapletoft's childhood in Lesotho, South Africa with the street style of London. Her intricate images seem better suited for a thick piece of pulp rather than a delicate swath of silk, which makes the creations all that more interesting. "I want Age of Reason to be the antidote to cute kitten and chintzy flowers on scarves," Mapletoft explains in a blurb for her profile.

7. Le Gun

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LE GUN, Le Gun Book, Issue 4


Le Gun, a printmaking collective in London, has one motto: the sum is greater than the parts. Bill Bragg, Chris Bianchi, Neal Fox, Robert Rubbish, Steph von Reiswitz, Alex Wright and Matt Appleton combine bits of punk, pop and occult to create largely monochromatic scenes that span from simple text to chaotic illustration.

8. Bicicleta Sem Freio

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Bicicleta Sem Freio, Go Skate, screen print, 2011


"Art, design and rock ’n’ roll," begins the online biography of Brazil-based Bicicleta Sem Freio (Bicycle Without Brakes in English). The description should probably include "women," as the work of Douglas de Castro, Victor Rocha and Renato Reno includes many multi-colored renderings of girls jumping, snarling and screaming.

9. The Hungry Workshop

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The Hungry Workshop, I Would Blank My Blank For You, letterpress, 2013


Husband-and-wife duo Simon and Jenna Hipgrave, from Melbourne, Australia, are masters of the letterpress end of printmaking. Together they amount to The Hungry Workshop. "Letterpress has an enhanced physicality," their description reads. "You can smell, see and touch an idea that has been executed with letterpress."

10. And Atelier

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And Atelier, Dédalo #7 magazine, offset, 2010


The Portugal-based design studio And Atelier, founded by João Araújo and Rita Huet in 2010, focuses on editorial and poster design. "Our work always tries to accomplish a strong conceptual approach," they write on their website, "Through very clean solutions and with a strong typographic component and respect for letterforms and reading rhythms."

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Salman Rushdie Chastises Authors Protesting The Charlie Hebdo Tribute

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NEW YORK (AP) — Salman Rushdie on Monday defended the PEN American Center's plans to honor the magazine Charlie Hebdo, saying the decision of six writers to skip the PEN gala in protest will encourage intimidation.

Rushdie said in an email to The Associated Press that PEN is "quite right" to honor the Charlie Hebdo artists killed during a January shooting at the magazine's Paris offices. Rushdie is a former president of the PEN American Center, a literary and human rights organization. He was forced into hiding for years over death threats related to his novel, "The Satanic Verses," which Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini condemned as anti-Muslim. "The Charlie Hebdo artists were executed in cold blood for drawing satirical cartoons, which is an entirely legitimate activity. It is quite right that PEN should honour their sacrifice and condemn their murder," Rushdie wrote.

Michael Ondaatje, Peter Carey and four other authors have told the organization they will not attend its May 5 event, the highlight of PEN's annual World Voices Festival, where the magazine will receive a Free Expression Courage Award. They cited what they called Charlie Hebdo's offensive cartoons of Muslims. The writers were among dozens of those serving as table hosts for the gala.

"This issue has nothing to do with an oppressed and disadvantaged minority," Rushdie wrote. "It has everything to do with the battle against fanatical Islam, which is highly organized, well-funded, and which seeks to terrify us all, Muslims as well as non-Muslims, into a cowed silence.

"These six writers have made themselves the fellow travelers of that project. Very, very bad move."

Sunday's announcement by PEN that the six table hosts had withdrawn set off a wave of responses and counter responses. Francine Prose, a former PEN president and one of the writers protesting the Hebdo honor, wrote on her Facebook page Monday that she was "disheartened by the usually sensible intelligent Salman Rushdie's readiness to call us 'fellow travelers' who are encouraging Islamist jihadism."

"I do hope that the audience at the PEN gala will be shown some of the cruder and more racist cartoons that CH publishes, so they will know what they are applauding and honoring," Prose added.

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Jayne Meadows, Veteran Actress And Widow Of TV Legend Steve Allen, Dead At 95

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Actress Jayne Meadows Cotter, who took turns lighting up the stage as well as the small and silver screens during her five-decade career, died Sunday at her home in Encino, California, reportedly of natural causes. She was 95.

Meadows was married to legendary TV personality (and frequent collaborator) Steve Allen for 46 years until his death in 2000. She was also the sister of actress Audrey Meadows, who starred in the Jackie Gleason sitcom “The Honeymooners.”

But Meadows was no wallflower.

Born in 1919 in Wuchang, China, where her parents were serving as Episcopal missionaries, the “glamorous” redhead, as The New York Times describes her, came to the U.S. as a child. In her teens, she discovered a passion for acting and began her career performing at several summer stock theaters. From there, she worked her way up to acting in films, television and on Broadway.

"She was not only an extraordinarily gifted actress who could move audiences from laughter to tears and back again all in one scene, but she was the greatest storyteller I have ever known,” her son Bill Allen told Variety in a statement.

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Allen and Meadows are shown at their wedding, July 31, 1954 in Waterford, Connecticut.


Among her many Broadway performances, Meadows starred in “Many Happy Returns” (1945) with Mary Astor, “Kiss Them for Me” (1945) with Richard Widmark and “The Gazebo” (1958) with Walter Slezak.

Meadows' first movie role was in the 1946 film noir “Undercurrent,” with Katharine Hepburn and Robert Taylor. She also appeared in “Lady in the Lake” (1947) with Robert Montgomery and “Enchantment” (1948) with David Niven. As her film career cooled in the early 1950s, her first marriage to screenwriter Milton Krims ended. She then wed Allen in 1954.

Meadows became a household name for her many small screen appearances. She was a regular panel member on the game show “I’ve Got a Secret” from 1952 to 1959, and appeared in numerous long-running TV shows including “Hawaii Five-O,” “The Love Boat” and “Murder, She Wrote.” Meadows would go on to earn three prime-time Emmy nominations for her roles in the series “Meeting Of Minds,” “St. Elsewhere” and “High Society.”

Explaining his wife’s appeal in a 1977 Los Angeles Times interview, Allen said: "She's an old-fashioned woman, old-fashioned in terms of her attitudes, her manner, her demeanor, her voice. She has a dignity that is rare these days. But she also has a lightness, an airiness, a girlishness and a certain degree of social innocence."

According to the Times, Meadows is survived by her son Bill, three stepsons, three grandchildren, eight step-grandchildren and several great-grandchildren.

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Timelapse Video Reimagines The City Sky Without Light Pollution, And It's A Wonder To Behold

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If there were no light pollution in Los Angeles, what wonders might you see if you looked up into the city’s night sky?

That’s the question filmmakers Gavin Heffernan and Harun Mehmedinovic attempted to address in this stunning time-lapse video that merges urban scenes from the City of Angels with footage of the star-filled skies in some of North America’s most beautiful “dark sky preserves,” or locations kept free of artificial light pollution.

hollywood skyglow

The video is part of the duo’s SKYGLOW Project, a multi-media initiative that seeks to highlight the problem of urban light pollution around the world.

Light pollution, also known as ‘skyglow,’ may not appear to be the most urgent problem facing the planet, but it may be the most indicative of humanity's growing separation from nature,” says the project’s Kickstarter page. “Light pollution impacts health of humans and animals, especially nocturnal wildlife, and disrupts ecosystems. It also leads to waste of large percentages of energy and the disruption of astronomical research, among a long list of impacts.”

Heffernan and Mehmedinovic told The Huffington Post over email that they decided to launch the SKYGLOW Project after realizing just “how widespread and destructive” the problem of skyglow actually is. A natural magic is lost, they said, when the night sky is washed out by artificial light.

skyglow

Mehmedinovic, who grew up in Bosnia but now lives in Flagstaff, Ariz., said he was always “mesmerized” by stars as a child.

“When I came to the U.S., and kicked around from city to city, it took me a while to realize I couldn’t see the stars at all,” he said. “It wasn’t until I started doing road trips across the country that I saw them, and had a flashback to early childhood. I was hooked again.”

skyglow 2

To create the Los Angeles time-lapse video, which has gone viral this week, Heffernan and Mehmedinovic said they painstakingly cut out the city sky in Photoshop, and replaced it with composites of starscapes taken at dark sky preserves such as Death Valley and the Grand Canyon.

“SKYGLOW is about re-discovering the incredible resource that is the night sky and learning about ways to protect it,” Heffernan, who is based in L.A., told HuffPost. “We'll be focusing on the stark contrast between the drowned-out polluted skies of urban centers juxtaposed with the amazing starscapes of dark sky preserves. We believe these two realities can come together with some ecologically intelligent choices -- in many ways, that's what this new SKYGLOW video is about.”

Learn more about dark sky preserves and light pollution at the website of the International Dark Sky Association. Visit the SKYGLOW Project Facebook page here.

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'Vagina Monologues' Production Reminds Female Inmates They Aren't Forgotten

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BEDFORD HILLS, N.Y. -- Elisia Dones, 59, gazed out the window of the bus as it passed Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, New York’s only maximum-security prison for women, and made a left turn.

The scene in front of her was familiar. Dones spent 1982 to 2003 at Bedford after being convicted of murder in the second degree. Some years, she sang in the inmate talent show, belting out Michael Bolton's "When I'm Back On My Feet Again." Now, she was returning to prison voluntarily -- this time to perform in "The Vagina Monologues."

Dones was one of three formerly incarcerated women cast alongside actresses and activists to perform this past Wednesday at Taconic Correctional Facility, the medium-security women's prison across the street from Bedford. The benefit production was a local effort within V-Day’s One Billion Rising Campaign to end violence against women. Eve Ensler, the playwright and Tony Award winner who wrote "The Vagina Monologues," accompanied the cast as a guest.

Dones, who now lives in the Bronx, said she believed the themes of the iconic feminist play would resonate with the women. "If you watch them, there will be tears that sneak out of a lot of their eyes," she said.

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Elisia Dones (left) was incarcerated for 23 years at Bedford Hills. At right, the cast has a group hug before performing "The Vagina Monologues."


Ensler's play, for those not in the know, is a series of monologues about the vagina, based on interviews the playwright did with more than 200 women. The work, which premiered in 1996, explores such topics as menstruation, feminine grooming, orgasms and childbirth, as well as more difficult subjects like child abuse, sexual assault and rape as a weapon of war.

"The women's stories in 'The Vagina Monologues' are the stories of many women in prison,” said Elyse Sholk, who co-produced the play at Taconic. “Most are victims of gender-based violence, and more often than not, protecting themselves against this very same violence is what led to their incarceration."

According to a 1999 report by the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, 57 percent of women in U.S. state prisons had experienced physical or sexual abuse prior to their incarceration. A separate 1999 study that looked at Bedford found that 94 percent of the women studied had experienced physical or sexual abuse, 82 percent had been physically or sexually abused as children, and 75 percent were survivors of domestic violence.

Co-producer Elizabeth Mackintosh said that due to the slow-moving prison bureaucracy, it took a full year to get approval to bring "The Vagina Monologues" to the facility. "With the lack of women-centric programming at Taconic, we felt it was important to start the conversation with Ensler's play,” she said.

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Women at Taconic Correctional Facility watch a performance of "The Vagina Monologues."


The production was held in the visiting room. With its vending machines and colorful murals of children flying kites, the room resembled a high school cafeteria. But someone looking out the window would have seen 20-foot fences topped with three rows of barbed wire.

The rate of women incarcerated in the U.S. has risen precipitously over the past four decades. In 2013, approximately 111,300 women were in U.S. prisons, an increase of 900 percent since 1977. According to the Sentencing Project, the number of women in prison is increasing at nearly double the rate of men.

With a capacity of 390 women, Taconic houses about 15 percent of New York's female prison population. Over 60 percent of women in New York state prisons are women of color, even though they make up only 35 percent of the state's female population. At Taconic, 43 percent of the inmates are black, 38 percent are white and 16 percent are Latina.

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The cast included three formerly incarcerated women, as well as several actresses and activists.


Some of the monologues were particularly apt for the incarcerated population. One of the skits, "My Angry Vagina," describes the dehumanizing aspects of gynecological exams.

"Why the scary paper dress that scratches your tits and crunches when you lie down, so you feel like a wad of paper someone threw away?" the actress says. "Why the flashlight all up there like Nancy Drew working against gravity... the mean cold duck lips they shove inside you?"

A recent report that looked at reproductive health care for incarcerated women in New York,concluded that women are frequently given substandard OB-GYN care and face "assaults on their basic human dignity."

Still, despite the seriousness of much of the play's subject matter, the overwhelming reaction from the audience was laughter. Throughout the show, the women dissolved into fits of giggles and chatted among themselves privately.

"Thank you," said one woman during a Q&A session after the show. "I don't know the last time I laughed."

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The audience found the play very funny at times.


After the show, the cast introduced themselves. When the audience learned that Dones used to be incarcerated, they applauded wildly. “It gives us hope!” one woman yelled. “God bless you!”

Another woman said she was moved by how the play tackled the diversity of the vagina. "It touched me," she said.

Josie Whittlesey, an actress who runs a theater program for incarcerated youth in New York City, said that in her experience, simply bringing outsiders into prison facilities can help those on the inside feel better. "Incarcerated populations are incredibly isolated," she said. "Anything that can be done to facilitate human connection is rehabilitative and can be healing."

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Eve Ensler, who wrote "The Vagina Monologues" in 1996, stood with the cast of Wednesday's performance.


Ensler offered some closing remarks at the urging of one of the inmates.

“We are here today to say 'We see you, and you mean something to us,'” she said. “When you are in here, clean out the stuff that’s in you. Write, paint, start a dialogue with yourself. When you get out, it’ll be easier.”

Ensler told The Huffington Post that she hoped the play could help the women break the silence on sexual violence in their own lives.

“Violence -- once it’s happened to you, you are a prisoner of it. As a survivor, I didn’t feel my life was my own. Things were just happening to me. I didn’t have control," she said. "I think the path to transformation and liberation is to articulate what has gone on in your life and bring some consciousness to what happened to you.”

She said that she does not support the prison system at all. “We have systems that don’t look at the origins of crimes," she said. "I don’t see how brutal structures of incarceration are doing anything but creating more violence.”

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Sharon Richardson (left) sits next to Rhonda Covington.


On the bus ride home, Sharon Richardson and Rhonda Covington, who had both performed that day and who had each spent more than 20 years in prison, reflected on the experience. Richardson said it felt good to entertain the women and take their minds off the reality of incarceration for a few hours. “Being inside, it’s like being cut off,” she said. “But in that moment [witnessing a performance], you are back to a time where you are not in prison.”

“It was amazing to see the excitement on the women’s faces,” Covington said. “It was more amazing that we were able to walk out.”

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Powerful Doctumentary Spotlights Artists Battling Segregation In Selma

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Earlier this year, a spotlight shined on Selma, Alabama, in remembrance of the civil rights march on the Edmund Pettus Bridge that was brutally interrupted by police in 1965. Though the violence of Bloody Sunday catalyzed the successful battle against Jim Crow laws, the city of Selma remains fraught with racism and segregation.

According to the Freedom Foundation, 80 percent of the town is black, but its only country club remains open exclusively to white members. Dallas County, which encompasses Selma, experiences unemployment at two times the national average; the crime rate is five times higher. This is what President Obama was referring to, when he said in a speech he gave on the bridge on the anniversary of the event. “Our march is not yet finished," he said, "but we are getting closer.”

Partaking in the metaphorical march is an organization called Random Acts of Theatre Company (RATCo) which aims to allow youth from all races and economic backgrounds to express themselves through art. Founded in 2007, it has locations nationwide, with headquarters in Selma. Director Joseph East took an interest in the group after visiting Selma on a history tour, and noticing the impact it had on its members.

“There is still evidence of the Confederacy and tributes to racism everywhere you turn [in Selma], from the street signs and public architecture named after Confederate Generals to the large Confederate flag waving in the cemetery,” East told The Huffington Post. He was taken aback by the dual sidewalks that still run through the town’s downtown district, with a raised path that was once reserved for white citizens.

"In East Selma -- the poor, predominantly black part of town, you'll see the poverty firsthand,” East said. “Including abandoned houses corroding and overgrown with vines; broken or boarded up windows; and unemployed mothers and fathers, and especially young men on porches.”

East says these not-so-subtle messages indicate to Selma’s citizens -- especially its youth -- that they are inadequate. But, at RATCo, kids of all races and economic backgrounds come together to dance, write, perform, express themselves and “discover a greater vision for their lives.” East’s documentary, “I Will Dance,” follows three of the organization’s members as they hone their artistic skills, and use them to confront the turmoil in their lives.

One such Selma resident, Semaj, has a passion for writing poetry, but fears his interest will make him at outsider. In East’s documentary, he’s shown crafting a piece about his absent father, and discussing how the writing process helped him come to terms with his anger. Another resident, Tori, uses poetry to face her introversion. And a third, Macio, is naturally more exuberant. “Every day, I dance," he muses. "I turn up the music. My mom hates it when I turn up the music really loud. It’s the only way I can get myself up and stop feeling crappy.”

East notes that the art created by the members of RATCo reflects their experiences growing up in Selma. “At first, a lot of kids come into [the program] feeling rejected, shut down, angry, and often wanting to inflict the same hurt they’ve experienced on others,” he said. “But they learn how to channel that frustration into a poem, or find joy through dance. When they do, it’s some of the most beautiful, powerful stuff.”

His hope -- as well as that of National RATCo director Amanda Farnsworth -- is that the group’s members carry its message wherever they go next. So far, it’s been a productive mission. Both Tori and Macio are still members of the organization, and Semaj, whose poem you can hear above, is studying literature in college, attending poetry slams and working for social change as a member of the only integrated fraternity on his college’s campus.

“[I] discovered not only that he is a gifted writer, but that he wants to use that gift to fight for change,” Farnsworth told HuffPost, noting that he exemplifies “one of the most exciting transformations we witness in the youth […] a shift from 'onlooker' or even 'victim' to 'activist.'”

"I Will Dance" is screening next at the Denver Center for Performing Arts on May 2. For more information, check out the film's website here.

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Meet The Little-Known Artist Who Inspired Walt Disney's 'Bambi'

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A lone deer stands on a windswept mountain. Though the setting is fresh with spring blooms, he looks still -- almost pensive, like the human figures overwhelmed by nature in so many Romantic paintings.

It’s the work of Tyrus Wong, a Chinese immigrant and WPA artist whose work served as the aesthetic inspiration for Walt Disney’s second feature-length animated film, “Bambi.”

The somber nature of the scene makes sense when taking Wong’s lonely upbringing into consideration. He travelled to America in 1919 with his father from Guangdong, China, but due to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, was detained for nearly a month upon arrival. He went on to work as a Depression-era muralist in Los Angeles, funded by the Works Progress Administration, and a film production illustrator for Warner Brothers from 1942 to 1968.





It was in ’42 that his work caught the eye of Walt Disney, eventually inspiring the look of Bambi. According to the Museum of Chinese in America, where Wong’s work is currently being shown, his “impressionistic art influenced the movie’s overall visual style and changed the way animation art was presented.”

“'Snow White' preceded 'Bambi' and was stylistically much different. The forest in 'Snow White' was ornately detailed, down to depicting every leaf on trees. It seemed as though Walt Disney was struck by the elegant minimalism of Tyrus’s interpretations of the forests in 'Bambi,'” Herb Tam, the museum’s director of exhibitions, told The Huffington Post. “Wong imagined a highly expressive forest, defined more by gestures, bold color schemes and suggestions of light.”





Wong’s earlier work used traditional Chinese calligraphic techniques to depict the people living around him in Los Angeles. “This bold outlining," Tam explained, "is reflected especially in how Tyrus handled trees within 'Bambi.'” Wong described his later work as representing “loneliness, and a little sadness. Isolation.”

Such themes can be seen in the serene forests he painted for Disney, too, with lone deer dodging fires, and standing proudly on hilltops.

Tyrus Wong's work will be on display at the Museum of Chinese in America from March 26 to Sept. 13, 2015. For more on the art that inspired Disney films, check out ourpast coverage of Mary Blair.

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Artist Lucy Jones Reclaims Her Identity And Sexuality Through Unapologetic Self-Portraits

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Lucy Jones with Her Walking Stick, 1996 Oil on canvas 218.5 x 157 cm 86 x 61 3/4 in





In "Lucy Jones with Her Walking Stick," a woman wearing a green pullover sweatshirt and white pants stands before an ambiguous, unnatural purple backdrop. In one hand she clutches a black cane. Her pupils drift outward, her toes point inward. From the tilt in her head to the angles of her arms to the pop in her knee, Jones' body appears to exist on multiple axes, hunched and crunched like a wounded bird.

The arresting and unapologetic self-portrait is the work of 60-year-old painter Lucy Jones. Her current exhibition, "How did you get on this canvas?" is comprised of such striking portraits -- confrontational, awkward, defiant, other. As the show's title suggests, Jones is well aware of how rarely "women like her" are immortalized in paint. Women approaching and exceeding middle age, women who don't ooze overt sexuality, women battling physical and psychological impairments.

Jones presents herself as a foil to the classical nude odalisque, lounging sensually with politely averted eyes. Instead, she stares straight ahead, eyes vacant yet piercing, challenging the viewer to question her prerogative to exist on the canvas.

Jones studied painting at the Camberwell School of Art and the Royal College and had her first show in 1987 with an exhibition of landscapes at Flowers Gallery, where the Metropolitan Museum of Art acquired two of her paintings. Her rising success, however, was soon overshadowed by the conceptual art mania incited at a 1988 exhibition of Young British Artists, featuring individuals like Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin, who opted for theory and irony over beauty, and used anything but paint.

With some distance from the limelight, Jones continued to paint, wracking up a collection of gripping self-portraits that capture the awkward joys and crushing pains of being alive.

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How did you get on this canvas?, 2013 Oil on canvas 180 x 120 cm 71 x 47 1/4 in


Jones was born with cerebral palsy, which, according to the Mayo Clinic, is a disorder of movement, muscle tone or posture caused by an abnormality or disruption in brain development, usually before a child is born. Jones is also severely dyslexic, a condition that she believes has shaped her life more than her physical disability. However, without knowing about Jones' existing conditions, her self-portraits appeal to the challenges many of us, notably aging women, feel when confronting their reflections.

"Painting myself has helped me come to terms with all sorts of aspects of myself: being a woman, being a wife," Jones told The Huffington Post. "Looking at myself in the early work I was joining up two aspects: the very bad and the maybe okay. The frustrations that my dyslexia causes me are something that cannot be seen by others. There is a split between what people see -- the physical awkwardness, and what they cannot see –- such as dyslexia."

Due to her cerebral palsy, Jones literally suffers for her work too, struggling to find a position to paint in, kneeling for two or three hours at a time. Her artworks themselves, however, illuminate the more subtle side effects of living with a disability, such as reconciling her own understanding of self with the projected perceptions of outsiders. In her painting "A Handful of Tears," for example, the word "Fallen" is etched backwards next to Jones' likeness, a term seemingly ascribed to her by the world's gaze.

For years, Jones did not allow art critics to reveal or discuss her disabilities, fearing the fact would too greatly color the works themselves. "Even now it is something I am wary of," she said. "I am an artist, not a disabled artist. In my paintings, using me as a stand-in for being human, it became harder to discuss the painting without putting some explanation. I think my work speaks without my personal narrative attached to it as it covers the universal about how difficult it is to be human."

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Flushed, 2006 Watercolour pencil on paper 76 x 56 cm 30 x 22 1/4 in


One distinctive element of Jones' paintings is their unabashed portrayal of sexuality. "I felt sexless (unlike Frida Kahlo)," Jones told the Financial Times about her ongoing battle with depression, echoing a sentiment endured by many women, so often expected to project a certain type of allure. In "Flushed," a watercolored Jones stares head on in a frilly black bra, her face blushing feverishly though refusing to break her gaze. The image challenges the dominant assumptions that older women, especially those with disabilities, are not desired nor are they lustful.

Jones' paintings, in the tradition of artists from Rembrandt to Lucian Freud, explore the awkward, ugly, salty and raw aspects of being alive. With pigment as her language, she visualizes the ways that otherness not only isolates us, but unifies us.

"My work draws on the physicality of my movements to make paintings which, to my mind, are translated through the physicality of paint, a medium I have used all my life," Jones concluded. "I see myself in a tradition of artists which include [Leon] Kossoff, [George] Baselitz and [Henri] Matisse, to name but a few. My work sits outside fashion, perhaps reflecting my feeling of being an outsider."

"How did you get on this canvas?" runs until May 9, 2015, at Flowers Gallery in New York City.







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Inside The Grueling And Poetic World Of Saké Brewing

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Next time you sit down for an uncivilized bout of saké bombs, consider yet another reason you should be ashamed of yourself. As the trailer for Kickstarter-project-turned-arthouse-darling "The Birth of Saké" explains, making the ubiquitous Japanese rice wine is a high art, a 2,000-year-old process that can take six months to complete.

Directed by a former "No Reservations" cameraman, the documentary is poised to be this year's "Jiro Dreams Of Sushi": another stunning deep dive into the highest ranks of a popular Japanese consumable.



Director Erik Shirai and his team profiled a premiere producer, the 144-year-old Yoshida Brewery in northern Japan. Yoshida employees range in age from 20 to 70, and often leave behind families to perform a job they see as a calling. A team of surrogate brothers, they sleep on the ground and eat around a shared table. The film interweaves this daily minutiae with the company's struggle to survive in a market stocked with younger, nimbler and less conscientious companies.

It's a story made for film, as thick with steam clouds as with metaphor, like the titular one: that a bottle of good saké is akin to a child brought up beautifully into adulthood.

birth of sake


No surprise, critics are pleased. It will "go down smoothly," promises Variety, in the first of likely many pun-stocked endorsements. The film has also given Yoshida plenty to post about on the company's Facebook page, which is surprisingly robust for a more-than-century-old underdog. Welcome to the future!

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Photographs Of Dancers In Motion Show The Beauty Of Ballet In Urban Settings

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Omar Z. Robles has earned nearly 45,000 Instagram followers by patiently waiting for the perfect interplay of limb in air.

For months, the 34-year-old photographer has documented dancers performing in gritty urban environments, where the contrast between an elegantly outstretched leg and a graffiti-smothered wall makes for arresting photography.

Emily for #ozr_dance @empaigeanderson #featuremeinstagood @instagood || #featuremedave @dave.krugman

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






In a video profile on Mashable, New York-based Robles photographs dancers in motion: some mid-leap, others spinning on a single leg with the speed of a top. "I'm in love with how you can express and create all these beautiful lines and movements with just the human body," he says in the clip.

The photographer's first foray into visual storytelling happened through the art of mime theatre. Robles studied under Marcel Marceau at L’École Internationale de Mimodrame de Paris Marcel Marceau. "Later, as I went to college to acquire my B.A in Communications and Arts, I discovered in photography a new way of telling stories without words," he writes on his website.

As for the rest of his portfolio, Robles focuses on street photography in NYC, capturing snapshots of the residents of Harlem in his "Sunday's Best" series and miscellaneous cosmopolitan scenes in his daily "TODAY" collection. For more of Robles' work, head to Instagram or scroll down for a selection.

Taylor for #ozr_dance @tee_co Session no.3 today.

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Yenessis for #ozr_dance @yene_23

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Eoghan for #ozr_dance @eoghandillon

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Yenessis for #ozr_dance @yene_23 #fujifilm #fujixt1 #classicchrome

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Elizabeth White for #ozr_dance @elizabethcarolinewhite

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Holding on. Omar Nieves for #ozr_dance @omaruelom

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Olivia for #ozr_dance @olivecrbs

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Alejandra for #ozr_dance @aquibes

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Greta for #ozr_dance @gretazuccarello Wardrobe by @namibiaviera

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Yukie for #ozr_dance @yukiespruyt

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on






Omar Nieves for ozr_dance @omaruelom

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Carla Sofía for #ozr_dance @sofia11713

A photo posted by Omar Z. Robles (@omarzrobles) on




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17 Stunning Images Show Prima Ballerinas Balancing Motherhood With Their Dance Careers

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Sixteen years ago, photographer mom Lucy Gray decided to create a series of images that would capture the experience of working motherhood. A chance encounter with a prima ballerina at the market led her to the world of the San Francisco Ballet and the dancers who balanced their onstage careers with their roles as mothers.

Over the course of 15 years, Gray photographed three ballerinas who had children -- Katita Waldo, Tina LeBlanc and Kristin Long. The photographer followed these women as they navigated motherhood and the professional dance world -- pumping during breaks backstage, dancing while pregnant, and playing with their children after curtain call.

"I wanted to get their experiences as dancers and as mothers," Gray told The Huffington Post. "I wanted them to forget about me and become a near silent witness."

Gray turned her series of intimate black and white photos into a book called Balancing Acts: Three Prima Ballerinas Becoming Mothers.

balancing acts

"What I learned was that their hallmark was dedication, and that made them effective as dancers and as mothers," Gray said. While the women had risked "losing it all" when they decided to bear children while working in their competitive field, the photographer said her subjects actually became better dancers when they became mothers. "For these three dancers, letting go of single-minded self-driven rewards and performing for their children put their vocation in perspective."

"It was the fact of doing both simultaneously that made them better at both occupations -- work and child-rearing. This was possible because of supportive husbands who were also working but doing the lion's share of child caring. They all brought the children to the ballet which kept the mother's connected through dancing seasons until they were off and could spend more intense time with their children."

ballet mom

Gray hopes that Balancing Acts will resonate with the millions of working mothers in the U.S. "Half the work force are women, and we might accept that that is a good thing, a necessary situation, and that that does not preclude us from succeeding as mothers as well," she said. "If we as a culture accept this reality then we might begin to support working mothers. If there is any phrase I have come to dislike it is 'having it all.' Why do we tell women that if we are mothers we must give up anything else or fail at everything we do? It just isn't true."

The photographer also wants people to feel the joy and pleasure in her subjects' lives as they embraced the challenge of having children while working. "These ballerinas created babies and roles on stage, perhaps their span of experience is greater than most of ours, but that gives us a bar to aspire to. They became better dancers after they had children and were better mothers because they kept dancing. They needed to work to support their children but they also knew that having careers kept them more interested at home. Both sides to their lives fed the other."

Keep scrolling and watch the book trailer for a preview of some of the stunning images from Balancing Acts: Three Prima Ballerinas Becoming Mothers.





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ASSEMBLAGE: Meet Queer Japanese Burlesque Performers Una Aya And Michi Ilona Osato

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“ASSEMBLAGE“ is an inquiry into the different ways artists utilize performance and technology to explore and express different notions of identity. An effort to push forward marginalized artists with a focus on people of color, non-western nationalities and those along the queer/trans spectrum, “ASSEMBLAGE” provides a platform for analysis of how art and performance intersect with the lives of these individuals who are visibly and openly existing in the digital age. This is the fifth installment.

Una Aya and Michi Ilona Osato are sisters, performers, writers and educators who utilize burlesque to explore their identities as queer women of color. Born and raised in New York City's East Village, the two have been performers from their early days on Sesame Street to their current work as professional burlesque artists.

For this pair of Japanese, Jewish, self-loving anti-Zionists, burlesque is much more than a form of entertainment. It's a medium for them to explore the nuances of their identities in the Western world while commenting on issues surrounding gentrification, the education system, the political nature of their bodies and natural and human-made disasters.

"Burlesque, to me, and my participation in it is about bringing my whole body in and through my work, which of course includes my politics and identity -- how I see and understand the world," Una Aya told The Huffington Post. "All of the things that happen in the world to bodies and to the earth, burlesque gives us a platform to challenge all of it in ways that audiences aren’t usually expecting. And because of that we’re able to really look at and show the ways that our different bodies are racialized, sexualized and treated. It becomes a place for us all to imagine differently and to change onstage who’s gaze and perspective we’re thinking about and who the protagonist and antagonists of our stories are."



At the heart of Una Aya and Michi Ilona's work is a focus on storytelling, heavily informed by the intersecting, nuanced layers of identity the two navigate on a daily basis. Their work focuses on creating spaces for the stories of historically underrepresented and marginalized groups to be explored through the use of their bodies and performance. The pair began the work they engage in today by recognizing that these spaces don't exist -- particularly for queer women of color -- within the mainstream spectrum of performance.

"During college I started to realize what the acting and theater industry was like for an Asian woman... By the end of college I realized that if no one was going to see me in or have parts for me, it would be up to me to create parts for myself and other people who have been marginalized in the world and from the stage," Una Aya continued. "Those are the stories that are interesting to me -- not the status quo but the lives of people who are rarely heard from."

The sisters' burlesque centers around an understanding that stories are what shape our world. Because of this, the pair oftentimes focus on disrupting dominant narratives of queerness and identity through their work.



Within the spectrum of queer performance, burlesque as an art form is utilized in a number of different ways. For the Osato sisters, the function of burlesque is both an exploration of their own identities, as well as a platform to deconstruct different social and political issues that are at the heart of the feminist and queer movements.

"I think performance can helps us get in touch with different aspects of our identity," Michi Ilona told The Huffington Post. "Through performing we access new parts of ourselves. We are performing our identities all the time -- on the street, at work, on the dance floor, in the bedroom. I find at times that performing pieces of my identity on stage helps me to find the courage to perform them off stage as well... With all the work I make I seek to intentionally use burlesque and drag as vehicles to discuss the interconnectedness of systems of oppression as well as how queering can aid in a mind-body-spirit liberation."

osato

The sisters also complicate the idea of "sexiness" through their work, a concept that tends to be at the heart of mainstream understandings of burlesque. The expectations surrounding sexiness and burlesque provide a point of entry for the two to complicate and challenge these ideas.

"Sexuality is a part of everything and what’s so exciting to me about burlesque is that it brings that to the forefront," Una Aya elaborated. "I love that burlesque is an art form where facing sexuality is something that cannot be escaped. Most people coming to a burlesque show have their expectations of what sexuality means, which is something often different than how we express it. That becomes just another layer of what we’re all uncovering together."

Una Aya and Michi Ilona also perform, at times, alongside their father, including a clown show the three engage in together that focuses on natural and human-made disasters (see below).



As the Osato sisters continue to gain notoriety and success on an international level, they will continue to do valuable political and social work through their burlesque. Some of their shows so far include a piece about the education system ("Recess"), being Jewish and Japanese ("JapJAP"), finding themselves in the world as women of color ("Keep It Movin’"), and exploring the political nature of the body ("exHOTic other").

In the words of Una Aya, "Through art and performance, burlesque, it allows for us all necessary acts of being able to laugh and enjoy ourselves together. The movement for liberation of all peoples’ is a long haul we’re committed too -- art and culture gives us all space where we’re seen and heard, a time to reflect, release, and re-energize. Performance allows for us together to have cathartic experiences. Even if it’s just us crying together, we need to have a real life process that moves us towards actual liberation."

Want to see more from Una Aya And Michi Ilona Osato? Head here to visit the Una Aya's website or here for Michi Ilona's.

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Ava DuVernay's Success Means She's No Longer A 'Hot Mess' Around Oprah

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Ava DuVernay isn't technically a newcomer to Hollywood, but her stature has grown so meteorically in recent months that one might assume she is. Just a couple of weeks ago, Essence branded her one of several entertainment-industry "game changers" and included her on its May cover. That's a feat for someone whose career has existed mostly behind-the-scenes, first as a film publicist and, more recently, as the writer and director of movies like "Middle of Nowhere," for which DuVernay became the first black woman to win the Sundance Film Festival's directing prize, and "Selma," the Martin Luther King Jr. biopic that scored a Best Picture nomination (along with a heap of controversy) at this year's Oscars. Her newest accomplishment comes in the form of a Barbie doll.

DuVernay, 42, will see the work she poured into "Selma" live on through Paramount Pictures, whose home-media arm is distributing a free copy of the movie to high schools around the country along with study guides for teachers who want to incorporate the film into their history curriculums. The director announced the initiative last week at the United Nations, where The Huffington Post sat down with her to discuss her recent ascent, which is now crossing over into the television world.

What does the DVD initiative make you think about your own history education growing up?
I don’t know if any part of our American educational system is doing deep dives into any part of anyone’s history. Part of what high school is is a survey, an overview. I think the cool thing about “Selma” is you can go a little bit deeper in the civil rights movement, which is more than just the overview of, "Okay, there was a movement that lasted from this year to this year." It allows you to go a little bit deeper into the iconography of King. I know these are stories and images that I wasn’t aware of in high school, to know the relationship between King and Coretta, to know the internal pressures within the movement, that everyone wasn’t on one page, that African-Americans were not a model in thought about how to approach the issues of segregation. Those are all nuances that you don’t really read in high school history books, or I certainly didn’t, not until much later when I majored in African-American studies at UCLA. So if you’re not going to be an African-American studies major, this is a nice cheat sheet so you can know a little bit more than the kids who didn’t watch this film. How about that?

You're announcing this on a historic day, with Loretta Lynch just confirmed as the next attorney general.
I know, I’m so happy. It’s a proud day. It’s also a bittersweet day because it took way too long. All of the politics around it just prove that any good thing is going to take struggle and a battle. But yes, to be thinking about ideas of representation through our film today and issues of marginalized people being able to participate in the American political process, not just as voters but by being our very representatives, and to have the top lawyer in the land be a black woman on this day is a very special, very emotional time.

If the Department of Education were to approach you ...
First of all, that would never happen once they see my report card.

If they were to ask you to submit a U.S. history curriculum based solely on films, what would make your list?
That’s a good question and this is going to go on The Huffington Post and I really want to answer that well, so I'm going to email you.

(DuVernay made good on her promise. We received an email from her the following day with this list of films: "Battle of Algiers," "Lumumba," "Malcolm X," "Schindler's List" and "La Haine.")

You're in a camp of people who have been crowned for carrying the torches for women and minorities in popular culture, which I think is partly a result of the Oscar controversy with "Selma" and its alleged inaccuracies.
You think that came out of the controversies?

I think it came from your responses to the controversies and the people who rallied behind you. Shonda Rhimes is in the same camp, especially when she gives these rousing speeches about human rights. Do you see that sort of de facto mentorship in yourself at all?
I don’t know if I see it. I just know that this is a time where the things that we make are giving us an opportunity to speak our minds, and I am excited by the fact that there are some content creators -- storytellers, writers, directors, showrunners, particularly women -- who are feeling strong enough, fortified enough, nourished enough, proud enough to say how they feel. Certainly Shonda is one of them. You have a lot of women who are not just content to make the thing and take the money and go away, but to make the thing -- and, of course, go ahead and take the money -- but also to say something, whether it’s through the work or as an addendum to the work or to the microphone in our faces as a result of the work. So yeah, I’ve tried to do that, and sometimes people like it and sometimes they don’t. Oh well.

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Oprah Winfrey, David Oyelowo and Ava DuVernay appear onstage at the 2015 NAACP Image Awards, where "Selma" won Outstanding Motion Picture.

Is that hope that one day soon you won't be asked questions like this? That you can just be a person making films?
But I’m not a person making films, and no one is a person making films. Everyone brings their identity and their gaze. White men like to think they’re just a person making films, but they are white men making films. I’m a black woman making films, you know? You are whatever you are, however you identify, and that’s the beautiful thing about it. I love to see films by all kinds of people. I don’t want to be stripped of who I am, and I would hope that people who come to see my films don’t want me to be stripped of that. The best films are ones that have some personal residue on them. If I see a film by Martin Scorsese, I’m seeing a film by an Italian-American New Yorker born when he was born, and that is going to look a certain way. So I don’t mind being asked questions about that.

You have a new show with Oprah and a pilot you're directing for CBS. Are you finding it easier to tell the stories you want to on TV rather than through film studios?
No, it’s not easier. The network system is as rigorous, if not more.

Even with the advantage of OWN? I'm sure CBS is much different.
It’s different than OWN. I can’t call up Les Moonves like I can call up Oprah. But no, TV is not easier and I don’t think it’s any more suited to any kind of vision. For me, it’s just another way to tell stories, and I’m interested in telling stories everywhere that I can. I don’t want to be relegated to one specific medium. I love film, I’m exploring television, I’m starting to look into virtual reality. I just saw some amazing virtual-reality stuff at the Tribeca Film Festival. Things are cooking. It’s just another way to tell the story. Art is art. It should be able to go wherever it wants to go, so I’m not relegating myself just to being a cinematic artist.

How do you decide how to toggle between depicting history and concocting a story of your own, like "Middle of Nowhere"? I know you're working on a Hurricane Katrina film, for example.
The Katrina story is very much like “Middle of Nowhere” in that it is a love story and a murder mystery wrapped around the time of Katrina in the same way that “Middle of Nowhere” was a love story wrapped around the notion of the prison-industrial complex and incarcerated individuals and their families. I like the idea of there being human drama set against cultural issues of our time. Katrina is similar to that kind of thing, where I’m writing a script from scratch. The thing I hate to do most in the world is to write scripts.

But you’re a writer!
But that doesn’t mean I have to like it. Do you enjoy it?

I like it when it’s done.
Exactly! And that’s what the CBS thing was, it was just done. I was like, “Oh, this is cool, let me get involved with that.”

Is there a certain formality with Oprah that you can let go of after having worked with her once, on "Selma"?
Now that I’m not freaked out, you mean? The first year, really, of knowing her, I was a hot mess. I just couldn’t get it together. I wasn’t myself. I would leave her and be like, “Oh, that was horrible. She never wants to see you again.” And then we started to work together in different capacities: as an actor, as her director -- there’s a certain relationship there -- and as my producer, and that's a certain relationship, too. Then, after “Selma” was done, it was just friendly. And she’s an amazing friend. Amazing. And then starting to work together again on something from scratch. So you’re right, there is a progression and a maturation of the relationship. It is much more of a shorthand, and yes, I’m less of a hot mess. It’s really lovely. We’re just getting started on this project, so it’ll be nice to see. I’ve never produced something with a friend, so we’ll see how that works.

Being able to say you’re not a hot mess around Oprah must mean you've made it.
I’ve arrived!



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Want To Stand Out In Cap And Gown? Decorate That Mortarboard (PHOTOS)

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It's hard to stand out at graduation when dozens, hundreds or even thousands of your classmates are dressed in identical caps and gowns.

But some students individualize their appearance by decorating their mortarboards. Designs range from a simple lettered message like "Thanks, Mom and Dad!" to an elaborate craft project with images, glitter or 3-D constructions. Other students decorate caps with school logos, or fraternity or sorority letters.

(SEE PHOTOS OF IMPRESSIVE MORTARBOARD DESIGNS BELOW)

At the University of Texas last year, Laurel Mohrman had a simple message on her cap: "DEBT FREE."

A 2014 Lehigh University grad, Lisa Glover, attached a miniature 3-D dinosaur to her cap; Glover launched a business called KitRex after graduating, selling kits to make paper dinosaurs.

Nicole Malli, a senior at Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin, wants to make sure her cap photographs well when she graduates May 17 because she's a commencement speaker. She's been looking on Pinterest for inspiration, and will probably use a pearl design because pearls are the official gemstone of her sorority, Alpha Chi Omega.

Ali Boden, who is getting her degree in sustainability and business from Arizona State in Tempe, will be taking a trip to Europe after graduation and hopes it's the first of many trips to see the world. She plans to decorate her cap with a map of the world and a phrase "along the lines of `The world awaits,'" she said. She's been going to Michael's, the craft supply store, to figure out the best materials for lettering.

ASU even has a contest to recognize the best-decorated mortarboards.

Ruth Lauture is graduating from Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia, with a degree in marketing, "so my cap is going to say, `I mean business.' Something simple, but really meaningful." The word "mean" will be in pink, partly to help her mom pick her out from the crowd.

Marc Goldberg's mom had such a hard time finding him at his commencement from Indiana University in 1997 that it inspired him to create a business called TasselToppers.com. Goldberg has now shipped several hundred thousand customized mortarboard designs, which let buyers choose background colors and add images and text. There's artwork on the TasselToppers website, or you can upload your own. Universities have licensed their logos to the company, and some colleges are encouraging high school seniors to put their future alma maters' names on caps at 12th grade graduation ceremonies.

TasselToppers' finished designs cost $15 and are printed on durable plastic the size of the mortarboard, with reusable adhesives. That way, rented caps can be returned undamaged, and commencement policies that don't permit mortarboard decorations can be temporarily accommodated.

Goldberg says he's been amazed at "the creative stuff that people come up with," including touching messages "in loving memory of a mom or dad who could not be there. It's a concept that they're looking down on them at graduation and the cap is looking back up."

Also noteworthy, Goldberg says, are designs ordered by older students who may have taken years to finish their degrees ("49 years old, finally done"); single moms declaring, "I did it for my kids"; and designs honoring students who are the first in their family to graduate. He also partnered with Autism Speaks to include the organization's puzzle-piece logo on his website so that students with issues related to autism can add that symbol to their caps as they celebrate their achievements.

"Everyone has a story," Goldberg says.



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Amazing Photo Series Reveals What Aging Superheroes Would Look Like In Retirement

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What will your favorite superheroes be doing after they hang up their suits, capes and masks? Well, they'll be aging like the rest of us.

A new photo series by Dubai-based photographer, Martin Beck, aims to illustrate just that. The collection, "We Can Be Heroes," shows what Batman, Superman, Green Lantern and many others would look like long after their days of fighting villains and battling for justice.

"I had the idea of portraying Superheroes in an alternative way. When we think of heroes, we think of beautiful faces, perfect bodies and how they achieve unbelievable feats with their powers etc. But in reality, most of us are not like that at all," Beck told The Huffington Post in an email. "We all, irrespective of our circumstances, can do good, help others. We all have the potential to be heroes... Anyone can be a hero, we just have to choose to do so."

Though they might be carrying a few extra pounds, some gray hair and wrinkles, the superhero series proves that strength really does come in many forms. Check out the amazing photos below and see the full collection here.







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11 Successful Women Who Know Life Is So Much More Than Your Work

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Life doesn't have to be all about your 9 to 5 -- just ask some of the world's most driven women.

We rounded up advice from the interviews, commencement speeches and social media accounts of insanely successful women. And whether they started out as assistants or failed before they ever succeeded, they all have stressed the same overarching question: Resumé aside, what's the story that your life is going to tell?

Here are 11 amazing pieces of life advice from women we love.


1. oprah




2. arianna huffington




3. madeleine albright




4. gabby giffords




5. maya angelou




6. mindy kaling




7. jk rowling




8. rachel maddow




9. hillary clinton




10. toni morrison




11. kerry washington

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Show Dogs Can't Hide Their Grumpy Feelings In 'Dry Dog Wet Dog' Photo Series

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Australia-based photographer Serena Hodson loves taking pictures of animals, because "they have no hang-ups. They don’t put on an act, they don’t complain about an unflattering photo and most of all, they make me happy."

Indeed, the dogs in Hodson's latest photo series aren't hiding their feelings, not one whit. Those feelings they're showing aren't always so cheerful, either.

"Dry Dog Wet Dog" captures show dogs in two essential physical and emotional states: dry and pleased, and then wet and oh so grumpy.

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Casper is an Afghan hound whose hair and attitude is better than ours, at least when he's dry. Photo credit: Serena Hodson


The idea came about while Hodson was washing her own dogs -- a British bulldog named Simon and a French bulldog named Garfunkel -- and noticed how being wet brought out different sides of their personalities.

Hodson had become interested in how portraiture could capture the story of how an animal's personality changes in various circumstances. She was also fascinated by show dogs.

"The posing and prancing, the search for perfection. So, I wanted to combine all of these pieces of inspiration together and see if there was an idea in it," she says.

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This old English sheepdog doesn't seem to be complaining. Photo credit: Serena Hodson


Hodson is aware that comparisons are being drawn between Dry Dog Wet Dog, and the work of New York-based photographer Sophie Gamand, whose own "Wet Dog" series won the Portraiture category of the 2014 Sony World Photography Awards.

"If I had to make sure my subjects hadn’t ever been captured by another photographer, I’d never pick up the camera," Hodson says. "The same applies to any creative pursuit."

What pleased the New Zealand-born photographer more was hearing from a friend who said that the pictures had captured the show dogs' vulnerability -- which made Hodson's friend, in turn, think about her own vulnerability. How she, too, hated to be seen with wet hair; how it made her feel exposed.

"I think any time humans can identify with an animal’s personality it creates compassion and respect," Hodson says, "which is always a positive thing."

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Wet Henri is not amused. Photo credit: Serena Hodson


And in case you're concerned about the dogs: don't worry -- even their dampest moods don't last long.

"The dogs that look the grumpiest to me -- Henri the dachshund and Garfunkel the French bulldog -- are the dogs I know very well. And I know they don’t hold a grudge when treats are involved," says Hodson.


See more of the "Dry Dog Wet Dog" photo series below:


Check out more of Serena Hodson's work on her website and on Facebook.

And get in touch at arin.greenwood@huffingtonpost.com if you have an animal story to share!



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-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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